
The quality of Safex Condoms is probably the best in the world - you can see something of the manufacturing process here. Remember, always use a condom with the BSI Kitemark - it's your guarantee of quality. |
Running under the stringent conditions imposed by its registration under the British Standards Institute, all packs of Safex condoms carry the British Standards Kitemark (BS EN600 1996) and our quality system conforms to BS EN/ISO9002. So you can be completely confident of maximum security when you use a Safex product. |
One of the most modern in Europe, the production facility for Safex condoms utilises the most advanced modern technology to allow around 770,000 condoms to be manufactured every day. But before we give you a simplified explanation of the manufacturing process, let's take a brief look at the history of the condom. It's commonly reckoned that the first condoms were made from dried sheeps' intestines and used by Roman soldiers to protect themselves from disease while "mixing with the natives" on long marches away from home. Over the following 1500 years or so, various accounts exist of condoms being made from materials as diverse as linen and animal gut. Some say that the condom was invented by a courtier of King Charles II in the 1600's and it is claimed that the great womaniser, Casanova, was a condom user. The first documented manufacture of the condom as we know it today is attributed to Goodyear and Hancock, in the 1840's, who invented the vulcanisation process. Enough of historical supposition, here is an accurate description of todays manufacturing method. It begins in the plantations of the far east, where latex buyers select the trees from which the latex will be extracted. A liquid, the latex is drawn off the trees at the rate of around two egg cupfuls per day and, after quality checks, the latex is sent to the factory. |
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Heat resistant glass moulds are dipped
into the liquid latex, where they take up a thin covering of the material.
After a baking process, the moulds are dipped again to take on a further
layer and the ends are brushed to create the thicker material at the open
end of the condom. |
The condoms are then washed off the moulds and washed in a special ingredient, to ensure that they are clean and smooth.
In all, 22 quality controls are carried out, 6 on the raw material, 6 during processing and 10 on the finished product. |
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Because condoms are actually used inside the body, absolute cleanliness is essential in the production process. All staff entering the production area must do so through an airlock where any traces of dust or other minute foreign bodies are washed off by a special air washing process. as you would expect, appropriate clothing, including hair and face coverings are worn by the production staff. The end result is a range of condoms that are unsurpassed in quality and worthy of carrying the BSI Kitemark (BS EN600 1996) symbol and which will provide the protection that consumers must insist upon. |
1. Welcome Page
2. Safer Sex guide for young people
4. The Safex Condom Range
5. Quality Information
6. Education Notes
7. Information for Clinics and Health
Authorities
8. SafeGuard Forte - the condom that's
proud to be gay